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      Late-19th-century artistic and literary movement

      • The Decadent movement (from the French décadence, lit. 'decay') was a late-19th-century artistic and literary movement, centered in Western Europe, that followed an aesthetic ideology of excess and artificiality. The Decadent movement first flourished in France and then spread throughout Europe and to the United States.
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  2. The Decadent movement (from the French décadence, lit. 'decay') was a late-19th-century artistic and literary movement, centered in Western Europe, that followed an aesthetic ideology of excess and artificiality. The Decadent movement first flourished in France and then spread throughout Europe and to the United States. [1] .

  3. Decadent, any of several poets or other writers of the end of the 19th century, including the French Symbolist poets in particular and their contemporaries in England, the later generation of the Aesthetic movement. Both groups aspired to set literature and art free from the materialistic.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. The Decadent movement is a 19th-century literary and artistic movement that occurred in Europe. It was a reaction to a perceived loss of cultural standards. It was heavily inspired by Montesquieu’s Enlightenment -era writings in which he described the end of the Roman Empire.

  5. The French Decadent movement took place in the "fin de siecle," so let's say around the 1870s-1910s. Decadence is separate yet related to the Symbolist movement of around the same time (inspired by Edgar Allan Poe and famous for its figurehead poets Charles Baudelaire, Stephane Mallarme, and Paul Verlaine).

  6. Mar 2, 2011 · Decadence is a literary category originally associated with a number of French writers in the mid-19th century, most notably Charles Baudelaire and Théophile Gautier.

  7. The term decadent was a term of abuse by French critics which the decadents adopted triumphantly. The Symbolist and Aesthetic movements were contemporary and similar. The classic novel from this group is Joris-Karl Huysmans's Against Nature, often seen as the first great Decadent work, though others attribute this honor to Baudelaire's poetry.

  8. www.tate.org.uk › art › art-termsDecadence | Tate

    Decadence generally refers to an extreme manifestation of symbolism which appeared towards the end of the nineteenth century and emphasised the spiritual, the morbid and the erotic. The term came into use in the 1880s with, for example, the French journal Le Décadent published in 1886.

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